Since 1939, The Teaneck Volunteer
Ambulance Corps has been Teaneck's Emergency Medical
Service. 1999, TVAC's 60th anniversary, was another busy
year. There were 3524 calls last year, an increase of 3%
over 1998, and an average of 9.6 calls a day. The calls
involved a wide variety of medical and trauma
emergencies.
A wonderful save occurred during a
second-alarm fire in an occupied multiple dwelling at
780 Grange Road. Due to the life hazards in such fires,
TVAC had sent three ambulances, instead of the two
normally dispatched to a serious fire. While the second
ambulance was enroute, the dispatcher reported an
unrelated "man down" in the main hallway of the
municipal building. The TVAC officer in charge of EMS at
the fire made a split-second decision to send the second
ambulance directly to this call, a decision that came to
be the right one. The crew of four EMTs found a 76 year
old man in full cardiac arrest. They started CPR, and
applied their defibrillator. In about one minute, they
had restored a pulse. They continued rescue breathing
with a bag valve mask while enroute to the hospital. The
patient, a successful painting contractor, fully
recovered.
On another occasion, a TVAC crew was
called by police officers who had found a 47 year old
woman to be dizzy when talking to her about another
matter. The police officers' instinct to call for an
ambulance was the right one. When the crew checked the
woman, she denied being distressed and refused to be
aided. However, while the crew was still packing up
their gear, the woman vomited, then didn't remember
vomiting. They implored her to accept aid, which she
agreed. Enroute to the hospital, she stopped breathing
twice. The crew successfully resuscitated her both
times, and she recovered.
There were three very challenging
Multi-Casualty Incidents (MCls) in 1999. An MCI is
defined, in Teaneck, as any injurious force or hazardous
atmosphere that exposes four or more persons. Two
serious MCIs were on Route 95. In one case, an alleged
drunk driver drove the wrong way on Rt. 95 express lanes
near the Leonia border. She collided head-on at high
speed into a car filled with family members returning
from a religious festival, causing four people to be
seriously injured, and two to die at the scene.
TVAC crews worked closely with the
Teaneck Fire Department in the extrication of entrapped
patients, and called in off-duty members as well as
ambulances from neighboring communities. The traffic jam
from this accident caused two other collisions involving
injured people.
Another major Route 95 MCI occurred
on a Sunday morning when a sudden ice storm caused a
thirty-vehicle accident involving one fatality, and
eighteen injuries, stretched out over 1/2 mile.
Ambulance operations were hampered by the unsafe roads
and the need to reconnoiter and triage over a large
area. In some areas, TVAC members encountered difficulty
walking due to slick conditions. Several patients spoke
no English. Surrounding ambulance agencies were called
to fill out the assignment of all TVAC vehicles and
about 24 EMTS. Ambulance protection for the rest of
Teaneck was provided by a Paramus Volunteer Ambulance
Corps unit, with a TVAC guide. As usual, several
secondary collisions were spawned by this major
accident.
The fire at 1500 River Road on 8 Aug.
99 was especially dangerous and stressful for the
firefighters. The blaze took possession of a two hundred
year old mansion in muggy weather. A major EMS
commitment was required due to danger of
heat-stress-related illness, plus the dangers from
flames, smoke, and building collapse. For eight hours,
TVAC members teemed up with the Box 54 Fire Service
Support Unit engaged in Fireground Rehabilitation, an
organized effort to relieve the dangers of heat stress
on the heavily-equipped fire fighters with effective
cooling techniques. Despite this aggressive preventative
health effort, eight firefighters were injured or
rendered ill, some from heat and some from muscular or
skin injuries. During this major emergency that required
five ambulances, one was diverted to successfully help
an adult male who fell out an upper-floor window at the
Glenpointe condominiums, and suffered a serious head
injury, and another to render aid at an auto accident on
Teaneck Road.
Good Emergency Medical Service is no
accident. Unlike most ambulance corps in Bergen County,
TVAC maintains on-duty personnel in Ambulance
Headquarters around the clock. The ambulance building at
855 Windsor Road includes sleeping and eating
facilities, with the goal that an ambulance responds to
each call within 45 seconds and arrives within six
minutes (nationally-recognized good practice calls for
an ambulance to arrive within 8 minutes). We met our
goal 86.6% of the time in 1999, an improvement of 82
calls from 1998, despite a significant 13% increase in
simultaneous calls.
Most responses that take longer than
six minutes are the result of simultaneous calls. Two
out of every seven, and three out of every 30, calls
arrive at the same time. Residents can help solve this
problem. DO NOT WAIT TO CALL THE AMBULANCE. Many
simultaneous calls arrive at or near 8 A.M. because
people experiencing pains, breathing problems, or falls
during the night wait until morning to call the
ambulance thinking that they are doing everyone a big
favor, but by bunching the calls, they are delaying
ambulance service, doing both themselves, and the rest
of the community a serious disservice. DON'T WAIT TILL
EIGHT!
To call the ambulance, dial 911 or
call 837-2600. There has been an increasing problem with
calling 911 from cell phones, as they do not always
reach a cell in Bergen County, even when they do, the
call goes through one or more other agencies before it
reaches our dispatch center. 911 service was extremely
poor during the four days of Hurricane Floyd, with a 37
minute delay, compounded by a wrong location for one 911
call. Fortunately, someone else flagged down a passing
police car and the patient got service much faster. You
may wish to program 837-2600 into your phone,
particularly your cell phone.
Don't forget that you can pull a fire
alarm box to get help for any serious medical emergency.
The Teaneck Fire Department will render aid, and
instantly radio for the Teaneck Volunteer Ambulance
Corps. In 1999, one crossing guard used a fire alarm box
to get help for a child hit by a car, and an off-duty
TVAC member used a box to get help for a woman trapped
in an overturned car.